Prioritizing genuine inquiry over settled certainty, keeping ethical understanding alive and responsive rather than dogmatic.
Nasreddin's teaching method rarely provided answers; instead, his stories posed questions that invited deeper thinking. This concept recognizes that animal ethics benefits from ongoing questioning rather than rigid positions. Should we have zoos? What do we owe to wild animals versus domesticated ones? Is insect suffering relevant? Can we ethically eat animals? Rather than settling these questions too quickly, this practice involves holding them as living inquiries. Nasreddin's humor helps prevent self-righteousness here—if you've found the answer, you've likely stopped thinking. This approach allows ethics to mature and respond to new information. It prevents the moral superiority that comes from fixed positions. The practice involves regularly asking yourself difficult questions about your own ethical blindspots, assumptions inherited without examination, areas where you might be wrong. This keeps you humble, curious, and genuinely engaged rather than performing righteousness. It acknowledges that our relationship with nature and animals is complex enough to deserve ongoing attention rather than premature closure.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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